Member Login

Contributions

Public pensions are financed primarily from two sources: contributions and investment earnings. Because nearly all state and local retirement systems are shared-financing arrangements, contributions come from both employees and employers.

Employer Contributions

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, in FY 14, employer pension contributions accounted for 4.5 percent of all state and local government direct general spending (an amount that excludes intergovernmental transfers). This is an increase from FY 13 when employer contributions were approximately 4.1 percent of state and local direct general spending. More...

State and Local Spending on Public Pensions, FY14

Employee Contributions

For the vast majority of employees of state and local government, participation in a public pension plan and contributing toward the cost of the pension are mandatory terms of employment. Employee contributions provide a reliable and predictable stream of revenue to public pension funds and typically are based on a percentage of salary as specified in statute, most commonly between four and eight percent.More...

Contributions Over Time

Over time, investment earnings finance a majority of the cost of a typical public pension plan. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, for the 30-year period 1987 through 2016, investment earnings accounted for just over 60 percent of public pension revenues; employer contributions made up approximately 27 percent, and employee contributions were around 12 percent.